• Advanced Photonics
  • Vol. 6, Issue 6, 066001 (2024)
Hongxuan Liu1,†, Bingcheng Pan1, Huan Li1, Zejie Yu1,2,3..., Liu Liu1,2,3,4, Yaocheng Shi1,2,3,4 and Daoxin Dai1,2,3,4,*|Show fewer author(s)
Author Affiliations
  • 1Zhejiang University, State Key Laboratory for Extreme Photonics and Instrumentation, College of Optical Science and Engineering, International Research Center for Advanced Photonics, Hangzhou, China
  • 2Jiaxing Key Laboratory of Photonic Sensing and Intelligent Imaging, Jiaxing, China
  • 3Jiaxing Research Institute Zhejiang University, Intelligent Optics and Photonics Research Center, Jiaxing, China
  • 4Zhejiang University, Ningbo Research Institute, Ningbo, China
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    DOI: 10.1117/1.AP.6.6.066001 Cite this Article Set citation alerts
    Hongxuan Liu, Bingcheng Pan, Huan Li, Zejie Yu, Liu Liu, Yaocheng Shi, Daoxin Dai, "First demonstration of lithium niobate photonic chip for dense wavelength-division multiplexing transmitters," Adv. Photon. 6, 066001 (2024) Copy Citation Text show less
    (a) 3D schematic configuration of the proposed LNOI photonic chip for DWDM transmitters. N FP cavities with the same MWGs and mode MUXs but in different cavity lengths are cascaded through waveguide bends at the reflected port. (b) Top view of the FP cavity modulator unit, consists of a pair of MWGs with a short straight section in between and a mode (de)multiplexer (inset: cross section of the LNOI ridge waveguide).
    Fig. 1. (a) 3D schematic configuration of the proposed LNOI photonic chip for DWDM transmitters. N FP cavities with the same MWGs and mode MUXs but in different cavity lengths are cascaded through waveguide bends at the reflected port. (b) Top view of the FP cavity modulator unit, consists of a pair of MWGs with a short straight section in between and a mode (de)multiplexer (inset: cross section of the LNOI ridge waveguide).
    (a) Simulated intensity (blue) and phase (red) response of the reflected TE1 mode (solid line) and transmitted TE0 mode (dotted line) of the MWG with the parameters of W=2.6 μm, Λ=430 nm, δ0=1.6 μm, and N=110; (b) simulated light propagation in the designed MWG when operating at 1550 nm (around the Bragg wavelength) and 1580 nm (away from the Bragg wavelength), respectively.
    Fig. 2. (a) Simulated intensity (blue) and phase (red) response of the reflected TE1 mode (solid line) and transmitted TE0 mode (dotted line) of the MWG with the parameters of W=2.6  μm, Λ=430  nm, δ0=1.6  μm, and N=110; (b) simulated light propagation in the designed MWG when operating at 1550 nm (around the Bragg wavelength) and 1580 nm (away from the Bragg wavelength), respectively.
    (a) Calculated effective indices neff of the TE0 and TE1 modes as the waveguide width W varies [inset: mode profiles |E(x,y)|]. (b) Calculated resonance-wavelength variation |δλres| of the FP cavity when assuming that the waveguide width is given as W=W0 +δw and the slab thickness is given as H=H0 +δh. (c) Calculated metal absorption loss of the TE0 and TE1 modes for W=1.7, 2.0, 2.3, 2.6, and 2.9 μm. (d) Calculated average modulation efficiency Δneff/U of the TE0 and TE1 modes for unit applied voltage when the average absorption loss of the TE0 and TE1 modes is 0.5 dB/cm (inset: the static electric field distribution).
    Fig. 3. (a) Calculated effective indices neff of the TE0 and TE1 modes as the waveguide width W varies [inset: mode profiles |E(x,y)|]. (b) Calculated resonance-wavelength variation |δλres| of the FP cavity when assuming that the waveguide width is given as W=W0+δw and the slab thickness is given as H=H0+δh. (c) Calculated metal absorption loss of the TE0 and TE1 modes for W=1.7, 2.0, 2.3, 2.6, and 2.9  μm. (d) Calculated average modulation efficiency Δneff/U of the TE0 and TE1 modes for unit applied voltage when the average absorption loss of the TE0 and TE1 modes is 0.5  dB/cm (inset: the static electric field distribution).
    (a) Calculated resonance wavelength shift with the cavity length variation ΔLwg. (b) Calculated reflective spectrum of the four-channel FP cavity modulators with a channel spacing of 1.6 nm. The inset shows the spectral responses when bias voltages are applied to the second FP cavity (channel #2).
    Fig. 4. (a) Calculated resonance wavelength shift with the cavity length variation ΔLwg. (b) Calculated reflective spectrum of the four-channel FP cavity modulators with a channel spacing of 1.6 nm. The inset shows the spectral responses when bias voltages are applied to the second FP cavity (channel #2).
    (a) Microscope image of the fabricated four-channel chip for DWDM transmitters; SEM images of (b) the FP cavities, (c) the MWG, and (d) the mode (de)multiplexer.
    Fig. 5. (a) Microscope image of the fabricated four-channel chip for DWDM transmitters; SEM images of (b) the FP cavities, (c) the MWG, and (d) the mode (de)multiplexer.
    (a) Original spectral response of the fabricated four-channel chip for DWDM transmitters. (b) Calibrated spectral responses with the channel wavelengths aligned to the DWDM grids by controlling the temperature and introducing static electric field individually. (c) Measured resonance wavelength shifts as the applied voltage varies from −20 to 20 V. (d) Experiment setup for measurement of small-signal EO responses and interchannel EO cross talk. Measured EO responses S21 for all the four channels (e) and interchannel RF cross talk of modulators (f).
    Fig. 6. (a) Original spectral response of the fabricated four-channel chip for DWDM transmitters. (b) Calibrated spectral responses with the channel wavelengths aligned to the DWDM grids by controlling the temperature and introducing static electric field individually. (c) Measured resonance wavelength shifts as the applied voltage varies from 20 to 20 V. (d) Experiment setup for measurement of small-signal EO responses and interchannel EO cross talk. Measured EO responses S21 for all the four channels (e) and interchannel RF cross talk of modulators (f).
    Measured eye diagrams for the four channels where the modulated electrical signals were generated individually and applied to each modulator one by one.
    Fig. 7. Measured eye diagrams for the four channels where the modulated electrical signals were generated individually and applied to each modulator one by one.
    Numerically calculated eye diagrams for channel #1 and channel #2 (a) without cross talk and (b) with cross talk from other channels, corresponding to the measured results in Fig. 6(e).
    Fig. 8. Numerically calculated eye diagrams for channel #1 and channel #2 (a) without cross talk and (b) with cross talk from other channels, corresponding to the measured results in Fig. 6(e).
    Measured standard deviation σ of channel spacings of three groups of FP cavity modulators. In groups A, B, and C, modulators are placed with a separation of 100, 40, and 20 μm between the adjacent two, respectively.
    Fig. 9. Measured standard deviation σ of channel spacings of three groups of FP cavity modulators. In groups A, B, and C, modulators are placed with a separation of 100, 40, and 20  μm between the adjacent two, respectively.
    Hongxuan Liu, Bingcheng Pan, Huan Li, Zejie Yu, Liu Liu, Yaocheng Shi, Daoxin Dai, "First demonstration of lithium niobate photonic chip for dense wavelength-division multiplexing transmitters," Adv. Photon. 6, 066001 (2024)
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